The Anti-Jacobin Review and Magazine
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Page : 606 pages
File Size : 24,58 MB
Release : 1799
Category : English literature
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Author :
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Page : 606 pages
File Size : 24,58 MB
Release : 1799
Category : English literature
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Page : 556 pages
File Size : 19,74 MB
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Author : John Richards Green
Publisher :
Page : 552 pages
File Size : 37,70 MB
Release : 1910
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Page : 550 pages
File Size : 30,38 MB
Release : 1811
Category : English literature
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Page : 614 pages
File Size : 40,85 MB
Release : 1799
Category : Literature, Modern
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Author : Emily L De
Publisher : Springer
Page : 221 pages
File Size : 43,9 MB
Release : 1988-03-15
Category : History
ISBN : 134919137X
Author : Rolf P. Lessenich
Publisher : V&R unipress GmbH
Page : 440 pages
File Size : 43,50 MB
Release : 2012
Category : History
ISBN : 3899719867
Romanticism was not only heterogeneous and disunited. It also had to face the hostile counter-movement of the Enlightenment and Augustan Neoclassicism, still going strong at the time of and in the decades following the French Revolution due to support from the ruling Establishment (the ancien regime of the Crown and Church of England). Neoclassicists regarded Romanticism as a heteretical amalgam of dissenting new schools, which threatened the monopoly of the Classical Tradition. The acrimonious debates in aesthetics and politics were conducted with the traditional strategies of the classical ars disputandi on both sides. Under the duress of the heaviest satirical attacks, Romanticism began gradually to see itself as one movement, giving rise to the problematic opposition of Classical and Romantic. The construction of this rough divide, however, was indispensable for the clarification of different positions in the hubbub of conflicting voices, and has also proved critical in literary and cultural studies which cannot do without such subsumptions. The Classical Tradition, encompassing Christianity, emerges as an ongoing event from Greek and Latin antiquity running through to our time.
Author : Emily Lorraine De Montluzin
Publisher :
Page : 232 pages
File Size : 40,13 MB
Release : 1988
Category : Biography & Autobiography
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Author : Avinoam Yuval-Naeh
Publisher : University of Pennsylvania Press
Page : 265 pages
File Size : 37,61 MB
Release : 2024-01-09
Category : History
ISBN : 1512825069
One of the most persistent, powerful, and dangerous notions in the history of the Jews in the diaspora is the prodigious talent attributed to them in all things economic. From the medieval Jewish usurer through the early-modern port-Jew and court-Jew to the grand financier of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and contemporary investors, Jews loom large in the economic imagination. For capitalists and Marxists, libertarians and radical reformers, Jews are intertwined with the economy. This association has become so natural that we often overlook the history behind the making and remaking of the complex cluster of perceptions about Jews and economy, which emerged within different historical contexts to meet a variety of personal and societal anxieties and needs. In An Economy of Strangers, Avinoam Yuval-Naeh historicizes this association by focusing on one specific time and place—the financial revolution that England underwent from the late seventeenth century that coincided with the reestablishment of the Jewish population there for the first time in almost four hundred years. European Christian societies had to that point shunned finance and constructed a normative system to avoid it, relying on the figure of the Jew as a foil. But as the economy modernized in the seventeenth century, finance became the hinge of national power. Finance’s rise in England provoked intense national debates. Could financial economy, based on lending money on interest, be accommodated within Christian state and society when it had previously been understood as a Jewish practice? By projecting the modern economy and the Jewish community onto each other, the Christian majority imbued them with interrelated meanings. This braiding together of parallel developments, Yuval-Naeh argues, reveals in a meaningful way how the contemporary and wide-ranging association of Jews with the modern economy could be created.
Author : M. Tomalin
Publisher : Springer
Page : 209 pages
File Size : 13,6 MB
Release : 2008-12-19
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0230228313
This innovative and ground-breaking study explores the complex relationship between linguistic theory and literature during the Romantic period, focusing particularly on William Hazlitt's writings about linguistic theory and also considering figures such as Leigh Hunt, Percy Shelley, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Thomas De Quincey.